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- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!uknet!edcastle!festival!cir
- From: cir@festival.ed.ac.uk (C Revie)
- Newsgroups: sci.energy
- Subject: Re: Energy Demand
- Message-ID: <28458@castle.ed.ac.uk>
- Date: 20 Nov 92 13:26:40 GMT
- References: <13527@ntdd-1> <1992Nov19.100122.14956@bernina.ethz.ch>
- Sender: nntpusr@castle.ed.ac.uk
- Lines: 40
-
-
- >So the question is:
-
- >How much energy is our refusal to adapt to our local climates costing us?
-
- >Can we change this? Should we try?
-
- >-------
-
- This is exactly my point. There is a cartoon that sums up this
- arguement, by Gary Larson (all hail the Great Larson :-) ) of frog
- pioneers in the desert, and one of them saying "We'll put the swamp here."
-
- Completely daft! A bit like putting a large city in the middle of the
- desert and having swimming pools, green lawns, air conditioning etc to
- make it bearable.
-
- Okay so Phoenix exits and you can't take it away. But to expect to live
- a similar lifestyle as someone living in a temperate climate, is
- unrealistic in the long term. Its a bit like trying to live like a
- native of the Amazon Rainforest in the Artic circle! (Perhaps a bit
- extreme, but the metaphor is still valid).
-
- To alter the above question slightly, What would be the effect of
- everybody in Florida taking a Siesta in the middle of the afternoon and then
- working until slightly later in the evening, on energy demand.
-
- On the plus side there would be less need for airconditioning in the
- evening.
-
- On the negative side lights would have turned on.
-
- What other effects would there be?
-
- The UK (and I believe now the rest of Western Europe) moves its clocks
- back in the winter and forward in the Spring to make the most of the
- available daylight.
-
- Chris cir@uk.ac.ed.festival
-
-